1st Edition

Play, Physical Activity and Public Health The Reframing of Children's Leisure Lives

164 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

164 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

164 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Are children playing less than they used to? Are rising obesity rates linked to a decline in children’s time to play freely? These and other related questions have filled the pages of newspapers, magazines and scholarly journals for the past decade. Researchers and journalists have attributed these issues to societal changes around children’s lives and leisure, the growth of structured and... Read more

1. The Play Paradox

2. Playing as Progress

3. Active Play: When Playing Becomes a Job

4. Playing is Fun! (…or is it?)

5. Risk, Play and Free Range Kids

6. Playing Just Makes Me Happy

Biography

Stephanie A. Alexander is Post-doctoral Fellow at the Collège d’études mondiales in Paris, France in the Chair Anthropology and Global Health. Her research involves critical examinations of interventions on children’s play and physical activity to analyse how play may be reshaped when it is promoted for health purposes. Her current research examines questions about the globalisation of concepts such as ‘active play’ and of assumptions about childhood and health that underlie physical activity interventions.

Katherine L. Frohlich is Professor with the Département de médecine sociale et préventive within the École de Santé Publique at Université de Montréal (ESPUM), Canada as well as Research Associate with the Institut de Recherche en Santé Publique at Université de Montréal (IRSPUM). She is Director of the Masters Programme in Public Health at ESPUM. Her current research interests include social inequities in health-related practices, the sociology of smoking and the playability of urban spaces.

Caroline Fusco is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education at the University of Toronto, Canada. She favours poststructuralist, feminist and cultural geography theories and her work is grounded in the pursuit of ethical relations, equity and social justice. Her current research interests centre on the cultural landscapes of play, youth and ecologies of urban recreation, intersectional studies of sport, sexuality and space, and she is most passionate about bringing a critical animal studies lens to the disciplines of kinesiology, recreation and sport.